One interesting outcome of the Super Tuesday primaries was that they once again proved that the conventional wisdom—including some of my own—was wrong. Just a few months ago the pundits assured us that with five strong candidates the Republican contest might not result in a clear nominee on Super Tuesday and could produce a deadlocked convention. In contrast, they said that Hillary Clinton would likely sweep to victory in the Democratic contests.

Instead, Super Tuesday has all but anointed John McCain as the Republican nominee and left the Democratic contest as clear as mud. Clinton won the big prizes of New York and California, but Barack Obama won more states and proved that he was not a niche candidate by sweeping the Plains States and the Mountain West.

Each candidate will claim victory, but the actual results were inconclusive. Neither candidate has emerged with unstoppable momentum or a commanding lead in the delegate count. The next few weeks will witness trench warfare between Clinton and Barack Obama as they battle for every delegate in their party’s proportional — not winner-take-all — primaries. In the words of Democratic strategist Bill Carrick, “To paraphrase Churchill, the Democrats are at the end of the beginning and the Republicans are at the beginning of the end.”

Already Obama and Clinton are wrangling over which candidate is more “electable” in light of the impending nomination of John McCain. The voters of every state should close their ears to such arguments.

If I could eliminate one word from the English language that word would be “electability.”

Democrats flocked to John Kerry in 2004 because they thought he was electable. Of course, he was anything but electable. There is no scientific way to determine which primary candidate is most viable in general elections, which generally are decided anyway by the performance of the party holding the White House. In primary elections, my advice is to vote for the candidate that shares your values and beliefs. Resist chasing the fool’s gold of electability.

There is also a deep significance to the Super Tuesday primary results; they signal the end of the conservative era that began with the election of Ronald Reagan in 1980. That will surely be the case if either Obama or Clinton prevails in the general election and will likely be the case even if McCain wins in the fall.

Conservatives have so forcefully assaulted John McCain because they don’t believe that McCain will keep the conservative flame alive within the GOP. However, as we learned from the liberal collapse in the late 1970s, political movements usually succumb to contradictions within their own traditions. That is precisely what has happened to conservatism in the era of George W. Bush.

For example, conservatives have backed limited government, fiscal responsibility and states rights. Yet George W. Bush has arguably built the biggest, most expensive, and most intrusive government in the history of the United States. Similarly conservatives have vehemently opposed social engineering by government. Yet they have taken on America’s most ambitious and costly social engineering project: to pacify, rebuild, and democratize Iraq, a land with alien culture and traditions, no history of democratic practice, and deep sectarian divisions. In addition, conservatives are caught between their business allies who will expect billions in payback for the millions they invest in campaigns and the party’s religiously conservative base voters.

Thus, 2008 could be a turning point election like 1932 or 1980 that marks the end of one political era and the beginning of another. Ironically, this could be the case even if the candidate of the incumbent party wins the White House.